Rabu, 29 Jun 2011

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The Star Online: World Updates


Bachmann says she can be 'unifying' U.S. candidate

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 09:22 PM PDT

ROCK HILL, S.C. (Reuters) - Rising Tea Party star Michele Bachmann said on Wednesday she can be a unifying candidate for the Republican Party's 2012 bid for the U.S. presidency by attracting disaffected Democrat and independent voters.

Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) addresses a gathering of supporters to formally launch her campaign for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination in her childhood hometown of Waterloo, Iowa, June 27, 2011. (REUTERS/Jeff Haynes)

Bachmann, a conservative member of the U.S. House of Representatives, said her experience shifting as a Democrat who worked on Jimmy Carter's presidential campaign to a Republican congresswoman enables her to attract other voters.

"What sets me apart is I've been there, done that. I understand where they're coming from. I understand independents," she said at a town hall meeting at Winthrop University's DiGiorgio Campus Center. "I am the unifying candidate that is running."

Bachmann, 55, is working to establish herself as the conservative alternative to Mitt Romney, the Republican Party's front-runner in a crowded field of candidates fighting for the right to face Democratic President Barack Obama in next year's election.

Her campaign was buoyed by a Des Moines Register poll on Saturday that showed her with 22 percent support in Iowa, only 1 percentage point behind first-place Romney in the first contest on the path to the Republican nomination.

Bachmann was also boosted by a strong performance at a New Hampshire debate two weeks ago, prompting Republicans to take a second look at her.

Wednesday's event -- simulcast on the Internet via Bachmann's website -- took questions from Facebook and the audience, which topped 600 in the main ballroom and several overflow rooms.

Bachmann, who entered to Elvis Presley's "Promised Land" and a standing ovation, focused her rhetoric against Obama's policies, notably the healthcare reform law enacted last year.

"This will not be an election about petty things, this will be an election about big things," she said.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Copyright © 2011 Reuters

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Magnitude 5.4 quake hits central Japan, 7 injured

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 09:22 PM PDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - A magnitude 5.4 earthquake hit central Japan and injured seven people on Thursday, but there were no immediate reports of major damage.

The epicentre of the earthquake, which struck around 8:16 a.m. (2316 GMT on Wednesday) was in Nagano prefecture, about 120 km (75 miles) from Tokyo, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

No tsunami warning was issued after the quake, the agency said. The magnitude was revised down from a preliminary reading of 5.5.

Seven people were taken to hospital including those hurt from falling objects, but the injuries did not appear serious, an official at the local fire department said.

Japan accounts for about 20 percent of the world's earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater.

On March 11, the northeast coast was struck by a magnitude 9 earthquake, the strongest quake in Japan on record, and a massive tsunami, which triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years, at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The disaster left up to 23,000 dead or missing.

(Reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Copyright © 2011 Reuters

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New doubts raised on Saleh's return

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 09:22 PM PDT

SANAA/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh was so severely injured in an assassination attempt that it is uncertain when he will return to the country, Yemen Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi has said.

Saleh was injured in an attack on his palace in early June and is receiving medical treatment in Saudi Arabia. Yemen has been shaken by months of protests against his three-decade rule.

A man rests during an anti-government protest to demand the ouster of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa June 24, 2011. (REUTERS/Suhaib Salem)

Hadi told CNN in an interview that he saw Saleh immediately after the bomb attack and the Yemeni leader had a piece of wood between his ribs in his chest and burns to his face, arms and upper body.

Hadi said according to the doctors no one can tell when Saleh might return.

"Days, weeks, months," he told CNN through a translator. "It could be months, this is a decision up to the doctors."

Opposition officials meanwhile said that more than 300 government soldiers had defected, in a further blow to Saleh as he recovers from his injuries.

In a message sent through his foreign minister on state television on Wednesday, Saleh called for dialogue with the opposition to implement a Gulf-brokered plan for transition of power.

"We discussed the Gulf initiative, and [Saleh] called for the opening of a dialogue with the opposition...in order to agree on a vehicle by which to implement the Gulf initiative," Yemen's Foreign Minister Abubakr al-Qirbi said.

Al-Qirbi said he had visited Saleh in hospital and that his health and that of other high ranking officials who were injured in the attack was "good and in continuous improvement."

Yemeni officials had said Saleh would make his first public appearance since the palace attack this week but Saleh's media secretary Ahmed al-Sufi told Reuters the president's plan to record a video message to be broadcast on state television had been delayed on the advice of his doctors.

Yemen, the poorest Arab state and a neighbour of the world's largest oil exporter Saudi Arabia, has been shaken by the protests against Saleh, a resurgent wing of al Qaeda and a separatist rebellion in the south.

The United States and Saudi Arabia fear al Qaeda may use the chaos to launch attacks in the region and beyond.

At least 26 Yemeni government soldiers and 17 Islamist militants linked to al Qaeda were killed on Wednesday in heavy fighting for control of a stadium near the southern city of Zinjibar, officials said.

An official said a counter-offensive was underway to retake the stadium, located near a military base.

Yemeni officials had been reporting successes against the estimated 300 militants who seized control of Zinjibar in May in the midst of a groundswell of popular protests against Saleh.

Saleh's opponents say his forces handed over the city to the militants to bolster his argument that his departure would lead to an Islamist takeover of the Arabian Peninsula state.

Yemeni air force planes had killed at least 10 gunmen in attacks on Zinjibar earlier on Wednesday, a local Yemeni official said. One strike hit a bus travelling from Zinjibar to Aden, the official added, killing five passengers and wounding 12 other people.

DEFECTION

Opposition officials reported that more than 300 members of the Yemeni security forces, including 150 from the Republican Guards led by Saleh's son Ahmed, had defected to rebels.

"From the podium of the Square of Change in Sanaa, an announcement has been issued that 150 soldiers from the Republican Guards, 130 Central Security soldiers and 60 policemen have joined the revolt," an opposition message said.

Government officials were unavailable to comment on the report.

There have been a series of defections by security forces since the anti-Saleh uprising began in February. Most prominent was the defection in March of Brigadier General Ali Mohsen, who has since sent in his troops to guard protesters in Sanaa.

Yemen has been largely quiet with a ceasefire in place since Saleh was injured in the attack, which investigators say was caused by explosives planted in the palace mosque where he and senior government officials were praying

Saleh, 69, who has not been seen in public since the attack, has resisted pressure from the United States and Saudi Arabia to hand over power to his deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, under a Gulf nations' initiative to end the crisis.

Hadi has been running the country in Saleh's absence but the opposition wants a formal hand over of power to pave the way for new elections.

(Reporting by Asma Alsharif in Jeddah and Mohammed Ghobari in Sanaa and Tabassum Zakaria in Washington; writing by Sami Aboudi; editing by Angus MacSwan)

Copyright © 2011 Reuters

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